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“Everlong” – Foo Fighters
(Words: Dave Grohl, Music: Foo Fighters, available on The Colour and the Shape, Capital 1997) 

Saying that Dave Grohl was the reason I started playing the drums would be false, but it’s not out of line to suggest that I might not have stuck with them without him.  Grohl was to me what Bonham was to a previous generation.  At first, before learning form, I emulated his power, later returning to admire the technique behind the bombast.  Back in February I wrote about coming home from school and bashing along with the mid-tempo songs on Nevermind, but it was the quicker, nimbler Foo Fighters songs I looked up to from the beginning.  “Everlong” stands out in particular, in part because it was the first song that made me listen to the radio for hours in order to hear it.  At the end of 2009, I could listen to a new song through a variety of channels before purchasing the album, but in 1997, I stayed glued to the radio hoping to hear those muted notes segueing out of a Smash Mouth song.

Part of this obsession grew out of my admiration for Grohl’s drumming.  Sure, it was Taylor Hawkins wearing the dress behind the drum kit in the video, but Grohl played most of the drum tracks on the album, including “Everlong.”  I remember putting on my headphones, turning the anti-shock skip protection on my discman on, and trying vainly to play those sixteenth note fills.  I don’t have a precise body count, but I attribute at least two bloody knuckles, half a dozen broken sticks, and one cracked ride cymbal to “Everlong” alone (and far more sticks and the rest of my started set of cymbals to the Grohl school of bashery).  This became my goal – I wanted to grow beyond playing like Grohl in the “Smells Like Teen Spirit” video and into the more technically proficient (yet aggressively fueled) playing that “Everlong” represented.  Through about half a decade of drum lessons, I improved yet never could nail every single fill in “Everlong” – in fact, I got just good enough to fake my way through the song.  Maybe I took Grohl’s ode to infatuation to heart, or maybe I just felt the exact same way about “Everlong,” but anything less than a full speed, fully embellished version felt like an incomplete tribute.  Rather than regret this, I look back at a time where I put everything I had into emulating something I loved and smile.

(For what it’s worth, I’m confident that with ten minutes of warmup and a couple Tylenol, I could probably “fake” my way through “Everlong” today, rust be damned!)

More on Foo Fighters: Allmusic | Amazon MP3 | Emusic | Last.fm

TAGGED UNDER: foo fighters | dave grohl | 1997 | 1990s | capital records | drumming |
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“Go With The Flow” - Queens of the Stone Age
(Words/music: Josh Homme and Nick Oliveri, available on Songs for the Deaf, Interscope 2002)

Queens of the Stone Age third album Songs for the Deaf benefited from an enthusiastic endorsement of one of their biggest fans.  Their songwriting and production seemed ready for their moment in the spotlight on this album, channeling their raw energy into focused songs.  Still, it’s hard to imagine the album getting as much attention without Dave Grohl’s repeated endorsement of the band.  He believed so much in this band that he briefly became their drummer, recording Songs for the Deaf and even touring with the band.  Grohl seemed ready for an opportunity to play the drums again, so I imagine that factored into his decision.  However, I’m sure Grohl could have found many opportunities, so his choice to become one of Josh Homme’s supporting musicians reads as a strong endorsement of the band’s talents. 

To be fair, Songs for the Deaf isn’t a Grohl charity project; these are punchy songs that tread the line between being heavy and melodic.  “Go With the Flow” balances these two elements particularly well, weaving backing vocals and a constant lead guitar with Homme’s vocals.  The lead guitar rings with near constant vibrato and sounds like a theramin on steroids.  It gives the songs an eerie undercurrent and a dark edge to counter the overlapping vocals in the chorus.  Grohl Former Queens drummer Gene Trautman (thanks David for correcting me - Trautman plays on this song and one other) plays the drums in his heavy yet quick pace, but it’s the constant piano vamp that runs through the entire song that gives the song a sense of urgency.  By having the piano as a constant through most of the song, Grohl Trautman becomes free to embellish his part and he takes advantage to toss fills wherever he can fit them.  The final product accomplishes both of its goals by sounding urgent and heavy at first while revealing a more subtle arrangement underneath its bombast.  It’s the kind of balancing act that I wish Grohl paid more attention to in his day job (at least on their recent albums).

More on Queens of the Stone Age: Allmusic | Amazon MP3 | Emusic | Last.fm

TAGGED UNDER: queens of the stone age | Dave Grohl | 2002 | 2000s |
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“Lithium” – Nirvana
(Words/music: Kurt Cobain, available on Nevermind, DGC 1991)

If you really want to know, I have two “first albums” because I bought two at the same time.  If given fifteen minutes and a calendar, I could probably pinpoint the exact day I bought them as well.  October 1997, I was a freshman in high school and had been listening to the radio for the better part of a year.  I’d make tapes off the radio, sitting with my boom box in my room with my finger ready on the red record button, ready to commit the next song to one of my Maxell 90 minute tapes (which I have shoeboxes of).  I consumed radio (and MTV, and to a lesser extent VH-1) as much as I could until waiting to hear songs on the radio simply wasn’t enough.  So while on the way home from a family get together and a stop at a Borders’ Books, I bought an old record and a current record.  The “current” album was Oasis’ Be Here Now, a record that’s unfairly maligned even if it’s not as good as the first two, and the “old” record was Nevermind.  Looking back, 1996-1997 wasn’t that far removed from the whole grunge thing, so Nirvana still received regular play on modern rock stations (hell, they still get their fair share these days), so it makes sense that I’d buy an album that had been on my radar for years (I remember where I was when Kurt Cobain died, even if I only had a casual understanding of who he was).

Today I own an embarrassing amount of music (I measure my iTunes by months now), but back then when my money came from birthdays and babysitting my neighbors, new music never came frequently enough.  This, along with the obsessiveness of my teenage years, led to me living with albums for a prolonged period of time, and Nevermind is one that I did a considerable amount of living with.  I probably listened to it on an average of three or four times a week for the first two years I owned it.  I taught myself how to play the drums with the first half of Nevermind, and to this day I instinctively start moving my hands and feet along to certain phrases in the album (not to mention a collection of broken drum sticks from trying to play like Dave Grohl).  I haven’t listened to some of these songs in ages, but I probably know them better than songs I’ve heard multiple times in the last month as they trigger something – emotional memories, muscle memory, who knows – in me when I hear them.  This is probably one of the reasons I rarely listen to Nevermind anymore – it’s so loaded with personal associations of those painfully awkward years that’s it’s hard to hear the songs without my own personal context rising back up.

Listening to “Lithium” now, it strikes me as the perfect example of the “Nirvana sound.”  Sure it has the soft/loud/soft dynamic that everyone points out (and yes, that the Pixies did first and probably better), but there’s so much more that makes this song work.  The slinky guitar line through the verse stands out immediately as it snakes through Dave Grohl’s bright sounding ride cymbal and Krist Novoselic’s minimal yet perfect bass line.  Cobain sings in a clean and (relatively) bright sounding tone (at least compared with some of the other songs on Nevermind).  Then, with a quick click of the distortion pedal, Cobain’s guitar becomes a wave of distortion, Grohl starts bashing at his ride cymbal (the only way to get those deep, violent crash sounds), and Novoselic’s bass becomes instantly more melodic.  Meanwhile, Cobain switches from his bleak poetry to a sea of “yeahs” – content to let his melody alone ride the cresting waves of sound without words.  Some might think it’s a copout to have a lyric-less chorus, but it takes a tremendous amount of faith that the melody will keep things interesting (and it does), but it also continues with the contrast in the dynamics; the verses are subdued and somewhat morose, but when the chorus hits the mood shifts to joyous and sing-songy (almost like, uh, taking lithium as an antidepressant?).  Cobain comes out of the chorus declaring his conflicted moods – he likes it, misses it, loves you, kills you, all while declaring that he’s “not going to crack.”  After his suicide, it’s convenient to declare “Lithium” as a portrayal of Cobain’s own fragile mental state, but it’s really a case in excellent songwriting where the music and the words work together to tell a story and convey emotion.  No wonder a teenager would latch on to this.

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

TAGGED UNDER: 1990s | 1991 | DGC | alternative rock | dave grohl | kurt cobain | nirvana | oasis | personal reflection | grunge | my first record |
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