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“Dig Me Out” – Sleater-Kinney
(Words/music: Sleater-Kinney, available on Dig Me Out, Kill Rock Stars 1997) 

OK, so this song came to mind in part because I do need to dig out my car from the snow storm that hit the northeast (and continues right now, I think).  Truth be told, this is one of the last songs I need to hear right now.  I haven’t left the house all day and it’s been completely unproductive.  Whether it’s because I haven’t done too much or because I can’t go anywhere, I’ve been feeling stir crazy.  Hearing a song like “Dig Me Out,” particularly when I should be forcing myself into bed, only heightens that cabin fever-fueled anxiety.  Thankfully I went against habit and didn’t make an entire pot of coffee today.  I can only imagine how I would feel stuck home, over-caffinated with the wiry guitars in “Dig Me Out” making my pulse quicken beyond a healthy level.

That being said, “Dig Me Out” serves as a solid litmus test for someone new to Sleater-Kinney.  Their sound went in different directions – occasionally darker, occasionally fuller – but “Dig Me Out” represents a sort of “home base” for the band.  The guitars and drums push forward quickly, shifting from a straight-ahead stomp into a half-time arpeggiated breakdown.  These guitars provide a fast counter-melody to Corin Tucker’s bellowing vocals.  She sings with such power and force that it feels overwhelming at times, particularly with the fast moving arrangement underneath her.  In a strange way, though, her vocals provide an anchor for the song, letting those guitars cut around quickly.  Those who might be turned off by her voice get a strong sense of Tucker’s upper register in “Dig Me Out,” but those who find it exciting or impressive will likely find the trio’s minimalism surprisingly dynamic.  Considering that (most) of their songs feature two guitars, drums, and voice, Sleater-Kinney makes the most of a few pieces.

More on Sleater-Kinney: Allmusic | Amazon MP3 | Emusic | Last.fm

TAGGED UNDER: sleater-kinney | 1997 | 1990s | kill rock stars | snow day | cabin fever |
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“The Engine Driver” – Colin Meloy
(Words/music: Colin Meloy, available on Colin Meloy Sings Live!, Kill Rock Stars 2008)

I surprise people with my tepid reaction to the Decemberists.  I think they are a fine band with a few superb moments, but some people expect that because I studied literature (and teach it to high school kids) that Colin Meloy’s “literary” style of songs should suit me.  I’ve had this discussion a couple times and it usually leads into the revelation that music – be it melody, rhythm, or just sound in general – captures me far more often than words.  I’m not saying words aren’t important, but a song needs to be more than just a well written poem to be a successful song.  Specifically, a story needs more than a gripping plot to become a song – it needs a purpose for the medium.  Perhaps this is why I like a few Decemberists songs yet struggle to sit through an entire album.  I’m fine with an album-length narrative thread, but at times the individual songs suffer under the weight of the full-length endeavor.

I tend to enjoy Meloy’s more focused songs – his “short stories” to his “novels, if you will.  I prefer to enjoy each song as its own individual entity rather than the means to a greater end; I’d prefer to hear a collection of assorted stories rather than one single narrative.  Perhaps this is why I like Meloy’s solo live album so much – without being bound to an overarching theme, Meloy’s songs shine even in this minimalistic setting.  Specifically, I’ve always liked “The Engine Driver” as a bit of commentary.  In it, Meloy sketches out a couple different characters, giving brief introductions to their physical descriptions and their circumstance.  No matter how many characters he creates, his narrator (perhaps Meloy, perhaps not) returns to himself.  When he sings that he’s spent “pages upon pages / trying to rid you from my bones” it could be an unrequited love.  However, it also could be about the artist’s need to create – in this case, the writer’s need to share a story – meeting with a creative impasse.  Meloy’s narrator keeps sketching out these characters yet can’t seem to flesh them out to his liking.  It’s difficult for writers of all skill levels – letting an idea escape your brain even if it’s not as perfect as the original thought.  When a writer creates the character he or she pictures perfectly, it flows freely.  It’s these imperfect moments that are hard to let out of the revision stage.  While sometimes these ideas become as good as the effortless ones (think of how many times you’ve read an interview where a songwriter says that the hit single “almost didn’t make the album”), it takes a degree of trust in the idea to let it live in its “flawed” state.  In this sense, the author has to love it enough to “let it go” and trust that it’s still worth reading even if it isn’t the original idea.  It’s an interesting spin on a love song and good advice for writers, even if it falls into the “easier said than done” category.

More on Colin Meloy: Allmusic | Amazon MP3 | Emusic | Last.fm

TAGGED UNDER: colin meloy | the decemberists | 2008 | 2000s | track analysis | kill rock stars |
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“Ruler” – Marnie Stern
(Words/music: Marnie Stern, available on This is It… [title truncated], Kill Rock Stars 2008)

This afternoon, I finally got around to reading Georgia Hubley’s liner notes for her compilation in Merge’s twentieth anniversary SCORE! Boxset, and she starts with an interesting phrase: “I do not enjoy using words to describe what I like about music (or anything, really).”   She then, appropriately, writes a great essay that reveals what she loves (in a peripheral manner).  On a very basic level, I agree with her sentiment – nobody needs to justify why he or she likes something.  Taste is subjective and (as I’m finding) greatly influenced by personal events.  Still, I believe that words can and should be spent on explaining why we love specific things in music (and if I didn’t, wouldn’t that make this blog an exercise in futility?).   I don’t want to make someone like the same things that I like, and I think that sometimes we fall into that trap of trying to “sell” something through the written word.  However, I enjoy the challenge of trying to figure out the things that draw me to specific songs and articulate them in semi-coherent sentences – perhaps this is the writing teacher in me drawing the specific connection between writing and the thought process.   Perhaps if I could write songs as well as Yo La Tengo (and more on them another night), I wouldn’t feel this need to tell you, dear reader, about my favorite songs every day.  However, this is how I pay tribute to those songs that I love.

Back to Hubley’s introduction for a minute – sometimes words can’t accurately articulate the experience of hearing a song or seeing a band play.  Personally, I had that experience with Marnie Stern.   After reading reviews, interviews, and testimonials singing her praises, I was intrigued to hear what this “guitar prodigy” sounded like.  Even with these warnings of her furious playing, I was still surprised at the intensity in her songs.  The combination of her lightning quick finger tapping and Hella’s Zach Hill’s physical assault on his drum kit makes Stern’s songs sound like sonic thunderstorms.  I was impressed with In Advance of the Broken Arm, but I can’t say the respect and awe translated into genuine enjoyment – I found that my ears were tired by the time I reached the end of the disc.

“Ruler,” unlike anything on Stern’s debut, stuck with me.  By her second album, Stern learned how to harness her raw sonic power to serve her songs.  In the verses, Stern pushes full-steam ahead, letting the drums, her guitar, and several tracks of her high pitched voice stir together chaotically.  However, Stern pulls back slightly on the chorus by singing in a more relaxed tone and toning down the sonic onslaught (relatively speaking).  Where many of her earlier songs sounded like relentless storms, “Ruler” sounds like a well-developed aural hurricane.  Having a stronger structural arrangement, like a hurricane ready to reach land, makes “Ruler” that much more dangerous, and like the storms, the most dangerous part comes right around the eye of the storm.  Where many could hold out against Stern’s earlier songs, “Ruler,” as Stern’s lyrics suggest, overpowers anyone in its path.

Consider yourself warned, even if it won’t adequately describe what awaits when you press the “play” button.

More on Marnie Stern: Allmusic | Amazon MP3 | Emusic | Last.fm

TAGGED UNDER: marnie stern | 2008 | 2000s | kill rock stars | track analysis | yo la tengo |
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