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“Already Gone” – The Eagles
(Words/music: Jack Tempchin and Robb Strandlin, available on On the Border, Asylum 1974)

After spending far too long listening to classic rock radio, including a couple jobs where this was on constantly, I’ve overdosed on the Eagles.  I’m at a point where Don Henley’s voice causes me to turn the radio to any other station instantaneously.  Perhaps it’s a reaction to being told how wonderful “Hotel California” was for years, because I can’t say I actively loathe their songs (“Hotel California” included, even if I wouldn’t mind going a few years without hearing it).  The Eagles do a few things well – for example, they can harmonize with the best of them.  They just tend not to do these things on the songs that get blasted over the radio.

“Already Gone” plays on the band’s strengths.  Specifically, the band uses harmonies without letting them overpower the rest of the song.  Rather than push the multiple part vocals out into the front of the mix, the harmonies blend in with the rest of the track.  This way, the harmonies strengthen Glenn Frey’s lead vocal, whether it’s the subtle underscoring in the verses or the more forceful and direct backing vocals in the chorus.  These harmonies also tend to wash over the vocals, emphasizing the sound of their voices rather than the specific words they sing – another plus since the Eagles craft sounds better than words.  Additionally, the constant interplay between the lead and slide guitars breathes a lively spirit into the song.  These two guitar lines run through the entire arrangement, rarely going more than a few bars without emerging for a fill or two.  It provides a harder edged counterpoint to the smoother sounding harmonies and offers another dimension to the track.  It gives me hope enough to think that there’s a few more songs like this (or like “Take it Easy”) in the band’s catalog – well constructed rock songs that won’t drive me to furiously press my car radio’s “scan” button.

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

TAGGED UNDER: the eagles | 1974 | 1970s | classic rock | track analysis | brian's disdain for don henley |
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“Drowned (live)” – Pete Townshend
(Words/music: Pete Townshend, available on The Oceanic Concerts, Rhino Records 2001)

The Who had so many unique personalities that each of the four members probably gave up recognition simply by being around such distinctive players.  Still, these four members made up one of the most influential bands of their era (and a band I deem as underrated only because they’re too often in the “second tier” behind The Beatles (rightfully), Rolling Stones, Led Zeppelin, and frequently Pink Floyd – I’d take The Who over the last three any day of the week).  One of the best parts of these songs was the controlled chaos contained in these songs; Roger Daltrey used his incredible vocal range liberally, John Entwistle redefined the bass player’s role, and Keith Moon’s insane syncopation created generations of really bad drummers trying to imitate him.  This leaves Pete Townshend as the foundation for the group, and while he could tear up a guitar solo with the best of them (more on that in a minute), his role as songwriter and sonic architect came first.  Townsend created the venue for his band members to run wild, often letting the best parts of his songs come from other people (the scream at the end of “Won’t Get Fooled Again,” the bass fills in “My Generation,” and any of a number of memorable Keith Moon moments).  Many times, these arrangements clouded the true genius – Townshend’s remarkable chops as a songwriter.  It’s easy to see how a band with two rock virtuosos (Entwistle and Townshend) and two of the most iconic performers on their instruments (Daltrey and Moon), that the songs might take second billing (after all, Daltrey sings “it’s the singer not the song, that makes the music move along” on “Join Together”), but Townshend wrote some of the most intricate and powerful songs of his generation.  Personally, I think Townshend reached his apex on 1973’s Quadrophenia – the perfect combination of an album long narrative without sacrificing individual songs.  Quadrophenia plays almost like a classical piece – different musical themes (representing the four “characters” in the band) enter and exit the piece at different points, appearing in different variations when the narrative calls for them.  On an entirely different level, the story tackles themes we all struggle with – self-identification, the longing for purpose, the capacity to love and to be loved – even after the teenage wounds start to close up.  I started giving Quadrophenia as a high school graduation gift when I was in college in part because it captures that time in one’s life and in part because it’s an album that more people need to hear.

So, when I came across The Oceanic Concerts a few years ago, I was eager to hear how Townshend and pianist/harpist Raphael Rudd would transform some of Townshend’s compositions.  In particular, Townshend’s solo interpretation of “Drowned” stood out, perhaps because I thought of it as one of the less likely songs to benefit from a barebones arrangement.  On Quadrophenia, “Drowned” gathers its strength from a complex arrangement that relies on contrasts – the grand piano breaks abruptly shattered by Moon’s thunderous fills, Daltrey’s theatrically varied vocals, and the shift from the loose feel in the song to a taut reprise of the horns from “5:15.”  It also features an extended electric guitar solo from Townshend, something that doesn’t usually translate well into the singer-songwriter mode.  Still, I think I came away from this version of “Drowned” impressed with Townshend the performer.  He varies his style at several points, touching on his trademark grace note filled chord changes with intricate finger picking, recreating the verse-chorus textual difference of the original.  When it comes time for the middle section, his performance makes it sound like his fingers are in a blur; he quickly strangles out chords while still managing to play a melody line through this burst of chordal chaos.  It almost sounds like two guitars playing at once.  Most impressively, he’s ready to snap right back into a more restrained style when it comes time to sing again (and he sings capably – he’s no Daltrey, but he does his songs justice).  Even decades later, Townshend’s performance sounds fresh – his avant-garde descendents could learn something from the master still.  This performance (and a handful of others on this album) give Townshend the opportunity that he sometimes doesn’t get in his own band – the chance to be both the gifted performer and skilled writer.

More on Pete Townshend: Allmusic | Amazon MP3 | Emusic | Last.fm

TAGGED UNDER: 2000s | 2001 | classical music reference | live performance | pete townshend | reissued | rhino records | somewhat dubious comparison to literature | the who | track analysis | classic rock |
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“Rosalita (Come Out Tonight)” – Bruce Springsteen
(Words/music: Bruce Springsteen, available on The Wild, The Innocent, & the E-Street Shuffle, Columbia Records 1973)

Earlier tonight at the Super Bowl, we saw Popular Bruce, as the E-Street band tore through abbreviated versions of “Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out,” “Born to Run,” “Working on a Dream,” and a crowd pleasing version of “Glory Days.”  Sure, there were other songs I wanted to hear (most of which would have tipped the running time over the twelve allotted minutes, as there were still thirty minutes of football) but I understood the selection.  Tonight’s set served as an introduction to the uninitiated or alternately, as Springsteen said this afternoon – “a twelve minute party” (and a twelve minute commercial for his new album and forthcoming tour).  It served its purpose – it was a fun set and a worth halftime show – a reward for those who stuck with the game through halftime.

While Springsteen has enjoyed wild amount of popularity, his more important (and more resonating) role is as Populist Bruce.  Some of this reputation comes from the E-Street Band’s lengthy tours and marathon concerts, but ultimately the show matters little without substance.  Springsteen’s best songs read like melodic short stories – he crafts characters with an eye for detail and empathy that most authors would kill for – so much so that many have lifted these characters from their songs and gave them their own stories.  For example, I just recently came across a book titled Meeting Across the River – a collection of stories that are all based on the short song at the end of Born to Run.  After halftime, I pulled Bruce Springsteen’s America: The People Listening, A Poet Singing off my shelf and flipped through it (remembering that I started but never finished it).  Robert Coles collected ten stories of Americans from many walks of life connecting with different songs in Springsteen’s catalogue.  Even searching Amazon for links to those two books brought up plenty more books that I haven’t seen – many of which go beyond the tired biographical route that gluts up the music section at Barnes & Noble.  These songs, and ultimately these characters, stick with so many people, myself included, because they seem real.  We know Mary and Sandy and the narrator in “Thunder Road” or the guy described in “Glory Days.”

Still, to me, “Rosalita” embodies all of the qualities I love about Bruce Springsteen’s catalog. Musically it’s seven minutes of unadulterated fun – all saxophone, Hammond organ, and the kind of drums I’d play after drinking an entire pot of coffee.  Lyrically, Springsteen describes a lover desperately trying to court a woman who’s out of his league (at least socially, as her parents try to keep them apart).  The arc is as old as time – Romeo & Juliet, Great Expectations, hell, even Slumdog Millionaire are all tales of unrequited or inaccessible love – but Springsteen puts his twist on it by casting himself in the song (or, at least drawing on his own experience as a struggling, working class rocker).  The last two verses – including that flawless call and response section with his background singers – rank among Springsteen’s best vocal performances.  At this point, he merges the youthful exuberance on his first two albums with desperation and passion that foreshadowed the creative leap he’d take on Born to Run.  It’s the Young Boss singing for sure – he wants Rosie to come on out and have a good time, but never loses his charm when faced with adversity.

More on Bruce Springsteen: Allmusic | Amazon MP3 | Emusic | Last.fm

TAGGED UNDER: 1970s | 1973 | Bruce Springsteen | Columbia Records | professional football | somewhat dubious comparison to literature | songs that align with historical events | track analysis | classic rock |

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“What Is Life” – George Harrison
(Words/music: George Harrison, available on All Things Must Pass, Apple/EMI 1970)

Sure, George Harrison’s All Things Must Pass was a tremendous success, but I’m always fascinated by the amount of attention paid to Harrison’s collaborators and friends than to his own skills as a songwriter.  Far too often, George Harrison’s name comes in tandem with his former band mates or Eric Clapton or even the performers he culled for his massively successful Concert for Bangladesh, but very rarely (or, perhaps more accurately – not enough) will Harrison’s songs receive the respect they deserve.  His compositions for The Beatles include some of their best songs – “Something,” “While My Guitar Gently Weeps,” and “Here Comes the Sun” – but they tend to be afterthoughts behind the Lennon/McCartney compositions.  Perhaps it’s natural that Harrison’s songs fit his personality – in general, Lennon wrote the moody, charismatic songs, McCartney wrote the carefully arranged pop songs, while Harrison wrote the contemplative and spiritual songs (Ringo, who occasionally co-wrote, was far more than the punch line that some try to make him into – but more on him tomorrow).

While “My Sweet Lord” was massively successful as a single (and rightfully so, as it’s one of the most beautiful songs of its era), “What Is Life” reflects more of Harrison’s strengths as a songwriter.  The opening guitar riff rivals any in his catalog, but the song’s true strength lies in the different ways that Harrison plays with the riff.  Each time through this introductory riff, a new element joins his electric guitar; whether it’s an echo in the bass line, a chugging rhythm guitar, or a closely related horn line, the riff’s firmly entrenched in our brains before the verse even begins.  Like “My Sweet Lord,” “What Is Life” draws upon Harrison’s beliefs in Hinduism, specifically in the idea of personal submission to the Higher Power.  While the song fits this idea, it also works well as a simple devotion to love.  By the time the final verse rolls along (including Eric Clapton’s slinky slide guitar lines in the background of that final verse), I can’t help but sing along to the chorus.  It might not get as much radio play as a Lennon solo cut or a Wings track, but “What Is Life” is one I always turn up when I hear it.

PS - I learned today that Olivia Newton-John had a UK top 20 hit with this song.  Thanks, YouTube!

More on George Harrison: Allmusic | Amazon MP3 | Emusic | Last.fm

TAGGED UNDER: 1970 | 1970s | classic rock | former beatle | george harrison | track analysis | EMI | Apple Records |
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