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“November Rain” – Guns N’ Roses
(Words/music: Axl Rose, available on Use Your Illusion I, Geffen 1991)

Like a lot of people who grew up in the mid ‘90s, I spent a lot of time listening to modern rock radio.  In the early part of this decade, that format started dying out for reasons ranging from its dwindling profitability as a format and the staleness of the genre (depending on who you ask).  In the past couple of years, the format’s returned as a sort of time capsule.  In short, it’s a radio station targeted at people my age – and rather than simply being “alternative rock,” it’s branched out to include both new and old music that people in their mid to late 20s like.  I’ve accepted that the radio in my area is no longer a place to hear new and interesting rock music (as it’s now either older, boring, or both), but I’ve noticed another disturbing trend on my station – fadeouts.  Sometimes, a well-executed fade out does us all a favor, but my local station has been fading out songs before the best part.

My surprise the first time I heard “November Rain” on a “modern rock” radio station only lasted four minutes – at this point, the song faded into a commercial.  I’m not denying that “November Rain” is overblown and probably too long for radio.  Still, enjoying the song means accepting, ignoring, or reveling in its absurdly grand arrangement.  It doesn’t need to be nearly nine minutes long, but the solution isn’t chopping off the end of the song; that’s the part where it gets interesting, where the slow and majestic ballad takes on a darker timbre, Slash’s solo feels a little more pointed, and Rose’s chanted vocals sounds slightly deranged.  Without this dark coda, the rest of the song feels limp.  That’s not to say the “main” part of the song lacks – it’s beautifully arranged and features an excellent refrain (and a couple killer solos).  However, it’s too long, and without the contrast at the end, it feels weighted down by all of its repetition.  It needs the dark turn at the end to highlight the strengths in Rose’s ballad.  However, when it’s faded out on the radio, it feels soft and meandering.  Ironically, by trying to “edit” the song down with a fade out, the radio station makes the song feel longer.

More on Guns N’ Roses: Allmusic | Amazon MP3 | Emusic | Last.fm

TAGGED UNDER: guns n' roses | axl rose | 1991 | 1990s | truncated radio songs | geffen records |
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“Red Rain” – Peter Gabriel
(Words/music: Peter Gabriel, available on So, Geffen 1986)

Generally, pop music uses rain as a setting rather than as a force of nature.  In these songs, rain is an impediment to the day’s activities or an obstacle to overcome.  It’s something to stand in, travel through, or keep us indoors.  When it steps out of the background, rain often serves as a cleansing agent – something to wash over us - or as a manifestation of the doldrums.  The Jesus and Mary Chain (and later Garbage) even equated rain with happiness, or at least happiness buried within a bittersweet memory.  Rarely is rain the thing causing floods, erosion, or other types of destruction.  When it is, it’s not called by its name – it’s a storm, or a hurricane/tsunami, but rarely rain.  Thus, when “rain” pops up in a song title, most of the time it’s the source of a slight bummer or occasionally a setting for some grand romantic statement or introspection.

Peter Gabriel’s “Red Rain” sounds like the exception to this generalization.  From the opening moments of the song, something sounds unsettling.  In between declarations of being surrounded by this red rain, Gabriel details a series of dreams where he helplessly witnesses someone (the “you” in the song) suffering.  He keeps returning to the sea yet still can’t remedy the situation.  It’s either a series of reoccurring dreams – where Gabriel’s narrator keeps coming up short no matter how much he hurries or whatever he tries to do – or a prolonged torture outside of his control.  Gabriel sounds anguished as he sings – not overtly tortured as if he experienced the pain himself, but rather helpless and frustrated by his dreams.  He chooses to use rain as the manifestation of this suffering, but it feels like he’s drowning in guilt.  Perhaps it’s guilt for being helpless in dreamland, or perhaps the guilt prompted the dreams.  Regardless, the choice of “red rain” suggests a deluge of pain, one that’s drenches him beyond his control.  It’s a despondent, anguished song on an album best known for songs associated with sweeping romantic gestures (“In Your Eyes”) and overt sexual come-ons (“Sledgehammer”).

As frequent commenter Jerad would point out, R.E.M. covered this song during a radio session in the 1980s (and is available on the In the Attic collection of rarities I.R.S. put out in the late ‘90s).  In between two songs from Reckoning, Michael Stipe sings the chorus of the song and one other line – “I come to you defenses down / With the trust of a child.”  This line is Gabriel’s final attempt to rid himself of the “red rain” – since all the extra effort did nothing to stop the suffering, he submits himself to the person in pain (and in doing so, suggests to me that he’s the one causing the suffering).  Stipe’s selection of the line shares the same feeling of submission and works in a similar way.  R.E.M.’s medley begins with “Time After Time,” a song that suggests a relationship damaged by the same fight over and over.  The medley ends with “So. Central Rain,” a song about regret over eroded dreams.  Both Stipe and Gabriel end up in the same place – after the rain, they’re left vulnerable and regretful.  While Stipe apologies in the aftermath in his medley, Gabriel seems happy enough just to be able to put his umbrella away.

More on Peter Gabriel: Allmusic | Amazon MP3 | Emusic | Last.fm

TAGGED UNDER: peter gabriel | michael stipe | 1986 | 1980s | geffen records | track analysis | cover song |
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“Round Here” – Counting Crows
(Words/music: David Bryson, Adam Duritz , Dave Janusko, Dan Jewett, and Chris Roldan, available on August and Everything After, Geffen 1993)

It would be unfair to boil the Counting Crows down to Adam Duritz and backing musicians, but it wouldn’t be too far off.  At their best, the Counting Crows craft music that follows emotional twists and turns Duritz creates with his lyrics.  It’s a credit to their musicianship that these guys fill any necessary role, whether it’s upbeat and jangly or downtrodden and reserved.  This emotional range makes August and Everything After a compelling listen – while Duritz hides behind the music occasionally, he generally bears all and lets the music reflect his mind.  While some of the later Counting Crows albums border on trite, Duritz is honest, subtle, and engaging on this album and provides a backbone for an album’s worth of wonderful songs.  While Duritz is the key figure, his band brings these songs the extra mile – he sets them up, they knock them down skillfully.

“Round Here” provides the perfect opening for this album.  It begins in a quiet, reserved way, almost tentative to introduce itself to the listener.  Lyrically, Duritz evokes images of fog, ghosts, and general anonymity.  He wants to blend in to the surroundings, but soon enough his narrator steps out from the camouflage and begins telling his story.  At his emotions bubble, the music flows behind him – rising when he’s getting back into it, falling again to start over.  When the band plays at their most aggressive (during the funk-tinged bridge), the narrator seems the most in control of the narrative.  At this point, he’s shifted from sharing his thoughts and painting details to giving advice.  Everything’s fallen into place at this moment – both band and storyteller sound at their most confident, but just like the lightning he sings about, it’s gone soon enough, leaving Duritz questioning his confidence again.  This ebb and flow serves his story better than a verse / chorus structure could.  Rather than fit his tale into a set formula, Duritz leads his listener through his mind and some of the idiosycracise and insecurities that appear throughout the album.  Every step of the way, his band is there in part as reinforcement and in part as a guide to the listener that helps to steer the ship behind Duritz.  It’s an apt introduction to both the album and Duritz’s individual stories.

More on Counting Crows: Allmusic | Amazon MP3 | Emusic | Last.fm

TAGGED UNDER: counting crows | 1993 | track analysis | 1990s | storytelling | geffen records |
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