Archive for the 'Classic' Category

Lost Records: Sonna’s We Sing Loud Sing Soft Tonight

When I bought two Sonna records in the fall of 2003, I had no reason to think I’d ever really fall in love with them. They were $4 apiece, used. I was working at WUAG in Greensboro, NC and had played Sonna a few times on my radio show. The musicianship seemed scattershot– music to write to and forget. In fact, I really only listened to them that fall. The records themselves sat on my shelves (reverse alphabetical order; next to Seam and Sebadoh) for a good four years before my rediscovery of We Sing Loud Sing Soft Tonight.

It was a true NYC winter in 2009. Those who know winter walking know how snowy weather compounds walking. They know how snow means more walking, harder walking. It means tricky slopes and steps, ice spots and huge hills of piled-up black snow along walkable parts of the sidewalk and street. It means constant vigilance. Once you get home, the bottoms of your jeans freezing cold and wet, it meant relaxing in the warmth. I went on a record exploration during those cozy nights. I was working on my first book and decided to break out the instrumental jams of a few years ago. When I ran across Sonna I furrowed my brow. They were exactly what I needed, but I couldn’t remember even buying the records.

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Classic And Unappreciated: Latyrx’s The Album

The Album

The year’s 1997, and the future’s just starting to sip its second cup of coffee.  Rock’s still reverberating with the echoes of grunge, but its quantum mechanics are oscillating to a mind-blower called OK Computer.  Pop’s gone back to bubblegum in a big way, thanks to The Spice Girls and The Backstreet Boys.  Over in hip-hop, the zeitgeist has glided into a glammier style of gangsta.  Meanwhile, tucked away in an underground Bay Area scene, rappers Lateef The Truthspeaker and Lyrics Born, collectively known as Latyrx, drop an amazing debut LP simply titled The Album, which manages to sound old-school and avant-garde, very much of its time and yet very much against its time.

The Album wastes little time showing off its progressive ambitions as Latyrx introduce themselves, fittingly, with a track called “Latyrx.”  The smoky, sci-fi beat by album co-producer DJ Shadow is menacing and enticing, like a rabbit-hole that leads to an opium-fueled cyber-orgy.  Then Lateef & Lyrics Born barge in and buck your brain like it’s probably never been bucked before.

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Classic and Unappreciated: Marshall Crenshaw

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The better heading for this essay is probably “Classic and Underappreciated,” because when Marshall Crenshaw’s self-titled debut was released in 1982, it sold pretty well, had a single that charted and made enough of a dent in the minds of enough listeners for Crenshaw to make an ongoing career out of it. Still, for all his talent and for all his good songs, Crenshaw’s is not a name that pops up as often in conversation as other tunesmiths’ might. Among glasses wearers of his generation – not the most scientific way to parse this material, but hey – he had more in common with Buddy Holly than Elvis Costello or Warren Zevon, both more biting in their wit, though not appreciably more intelligent, at least compared to the persona put forth in the songs on this album.

Several times, we hear the declarations of a young man grappling with love, often counteracting his vulnerability with his strong intellect. “There She Goes Again” kicks off the album, and introduces that mindset. He’s lost a girl who’s now going out with guy after guy: He acknowledges it’s a “sad situation” but knows he’s going to “find someone better” because he can live without her. Instead of wallowing and playing the victim, the bouncy major-key shuffle speaks to his being pretty much okay with this, his having moved on even this far. It’s the most polite kiss-off song I can think of. Later on, we hear that he’s going out looking for a “Cynical Girl” – the “he” is not necessarily the same character, of course, but whoever it is knows what he wants and it’s not foremost a Pleasant Girl or a Subservient Girl but one who’s been disillusioned, who sees the world as it is (even though the singer professes to want to be “lost in love” at this point – I guess someone has to take the wheel).

Crenshaw’s songs here are clearly not as political as those others’ I mentioned occasionally were – “Soldier of Love” is as close as it gets – but that approachable charm is why the music was especially refreshing. Even when it was released, some of the musical arrangements were less “outdated” than they were “classic” since they pulled in some of the best of what the previous 30 years of popular music had to offer. The Buddy Holly comparison is easy but apt, especially considering Crenshaw portrayed Holly in the movie La Bamba. Their songs are largely simple but elegantly so, with tight melodies over familiar chord progressions such that there don’t seem to be many extra moving parts. The 1950s homages/inspirations continue with the close Everly Brothers-style harmonies that shimmer regularly on here. Even “The Usual Thing” resembles a rockabilly version of “Rock and Roll Music,” especially towards the end of the chorus.

These connections, while clear, are never overbearing. And while they contribute to Crenshaw’s sound, it is more widely a mixture of clean guitars, moderate-to-uptempo songs, and a tight rhythm section featuring especially propelling basslines. “Someday, Someway” and “Mary Anne” are both well-wrought pop gems that also feature the band’s talent on full display. Not to be overlooked, “She Can’t Dance” and “Brand New Lover” are the kinds of songs that makes a sunny day feel sunnier.

It’s hard to figure why Marshall Crenshaw didn’t retain the success of his early career, but it’s certainly easier just to know that most bands don’t. That’s largely beyond the scope of this appreciation anyway. This album is an excellent collection of songs, and that’s all we need to know. While it’s now just about thirty years old, and some of its inspiration nearly sixty, the sounds are familiar enough and fun enough for it still to have a surprising amount to offer.

Classic and Unappreciated: Television Personalities’ And Don’t The Kids Just Love It

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SPIN: Who would you say were the ultimate punk band?

Joe Strummer: The Television Personalities.

SPIN: Really?

Joe Strummer: Well, they’re second place.  First place are The Ramones.  They’re the daddy punk rock group of all time.  The Television Personalities, they’re slightly obscure, but they brought a severe sense of intelligence to it, just at a time when punk needed the piss taken out of it.

- from SPIN’s “25 Years of Punk” Issue, May 2001

If you really wanted to, you could certainly classify The Television Personalities’ And Don’t The Kids Just Love It as a punk rock record.  Most of its songs are short, catchy, energetic, ramshackle, and irreverent.  Yet TVPs frontman Dan Treacy probably isn’t anyone’s idea of a prototypical punk.  He seems like he wouldn’t last 3 minutes at a late-70s Sex Pistols show before there was nothing left of him but a tattered sweater and a red stain on the floor.  It’s not simply because he’s the kind of lad who’d sing about spending his days writing silly poems for a girl who doesn’t love him back.  The Buzzcocks’ Pete Shelley, for instance, sang about hopeless romanticism, but his voice had an edge that suggested he could still hold his own amid a horde of slam-dancing hooligans.  Dan Treacy, on the other hand, frequently sounds like a younger, wimpier version of the chap from Wallace & Gromit.  And his guitars sound not like methamphetamines and barbed wire, but like shattered dreams and reluctantly obedient schoolchildren.

But despite his feeble demeanor, his songs often were, as Joe Strummer said, intelligent and piss-taking.  While I can easily imagine Treacy trampled to a bloody pulp by a crowd of angry punks, I can also imagine he’d unleash some pretty sharp bon mots even as he was getting his teeth kicked in.  Probably some jibes about his assailants being phony part-time punks with trendy emotional complexes, followed by a lament so depressing it’s hilarious.  (”Just like life, there’s a good beginning/ but there is no middle/ so you might as well skip to the end.”)

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Classic and Unappreciated: Small Factory’s For If You Cannot Fly (Part Two, Side Two)

Read Part One, Side One

If the first side of Small Factory is an audience-confessional, the second side is a lonely and different beast. “Bright Side” fades in with a seemingly hopeful message: “If you start to cry,/ I’ll be the one to wipe those tears from your eyes.” Only thing is, the terms and conditions of this friendship are a continual mess. The ceiling is thought to cave in, the once-quiet voices (a rare time to feature the backing voice of Phoebe Summersquash) and guitars get more chaotic and the promises become destitute threats until the lyrics tell us the end is near; the green grass coming. It is a short introduction to the sea change awaiting us. “Bright Side” prepares us for the turn toward reverie and vagueness, the opposite of what we’ve experienced thus far in the record.

Replacing Alex Kemp as lead singer is Dan Auchenbach, and he leads “Sun Goes Ahh” into apocalyptic surreality. “I know you’ve been waiting for a long, long time,/ I’ve been waiting too./ But I won’t wait until the sun goes ahh,/ When the sun goes ahh,/ I’ll be lying down with you.” More passive and general, the album’s structure and intimidating specificity give way to a brittle bleakness. “I said, ‘come on let’s make the end of the world– come on let’s make it over now.’” The loudness, the crassness of earlier songs is now conciliatory to endings and beginnings. “Sun Goes Ahh” builds nicely into a measured, rocking and altogether cold ending– the significance of the end of the world alluded to in the song. Whether relationship-driven or actually apocalyptic I’m not sure, but the song is a simple and calculated evolution.

Continuing on a rollicking note, “Three Months Later” is an easier-swallowed capsule of Auchenbach’s style. At first ungraceful, the song bridges into a stream-of-consciousness back-and-forth between both Kemp and Auchenbach. As the songs recedes and rebuilds, the group flaunts their full capability: the drums are a purposefully messy splash of cymbals, the guitar and bass are playfully similar and the vocalists are dropping different points-of-view on the same subject. The songs almost dares the listener to think the men are arguing belabored points before they both chime in on the final, repeated line: “No, I’m not gonna fade/ not gonna fade away.” Despite the various problems each song has brought up, the band settles on a simple refrain from the past. They have created a mantra; no matter how unbelievable it may seem.

For If You Cannot Fly preaches in simple refrains. Throughout the record to this point, each song has a simple lesson or at the very least a thematic expression of lessons learned. Even the demonic-sounding “Everyone’s Happy…” sings parables and periodic bursts of hope in an otherwise complicated (though undefined) norm. The refrains are seldom perfect or even self-professed as correct, but they are nonetheless a point of need for the listener. When I hear “For When You Cannot Land,” I hear a parental-like voice of summary. A makeshift burden begins the song: “Couldn’t land at all today… You’re looking awful bad/ and me I look like you.” The song pipes in with a noisier guitar and Alex Kemp retakes the lead vocal. “Sure, it still hurts,/ but it’s not much worse/ and besides, I’m not having much fun.” The lines are reflexive, less-than-poignant statements of fact. “What if I got sick?” “What if they sent me to Mars?” “What if I can’t send a card/ ’cause I can’t tell it’s Christmas anymore?” The lyrics devolve into a deep-seated fear, but the absurdity Kemp exudes brings levity. “For If You Cannot Land” isn’t the end of the world like “Sun Goes Ahh,” or a specific feeling like the beginning of the album, but it is more important. “For If…” is a list of possibles and a statement of the obvious: anything is possible and nothing good is happening. Kemp and Summersquash even trade off saying: “Don’t make me say it again” before finally Kemp reluctantly repeats the beginning line, “Couldn’t land at all today…”

The second half of the album rejects so much of the conventions of Small Factory’s previous songwriting. The verse-chorus-verse half of the record is past, and the pain and realization of repeating lines falls in tandem with beating the point home rather than filling space. Yes, the songs Kemp sings are similar, but “For If You Cannot Land” squarely belongs where it is, as all the songs do. The second half of For If You Cannot Fly is dialogue instead of storytelling. It is rationale instead rationalizations. And the record ends with pop sensibilities missing in the rest of the songs. Traditionalism oozes from “Sixteen Years Later.” The chorus is a chugging train that devolves into the singers recanting the word “home” as they crest a mountain. “Well, you know sometimes I don’t think any time has gone by/ No time has passed at all (Auchenbach)/ and my life’s just a movie with a story and an ending and all that after all (Kemp).” They describe the sights from the “big fast train” by saying “things go by.” It’s so fitting that the images we get throughout the album are exactly that: “things go by.” No relationship is described, but each is detailed. No statement is fact, but each is truth. As each listener heads home, to the end of the album, we are reminded that over each obstacle, things go by. It’s certainly a cop-out to say it so easily, without even having to try. But so is telling me about snow or a woman’s dress, or the hue of a partner in mid-argument. Sometimes it’s easier to tell the listener nothing rather than confer everything.

Of course, Small Factory tell us everything we need to know on “For If You Cannot Fly.” We learn, in short spaces, what happens. We learn that nothing alluded to is simple, but the outcomes and circumstances should be. Most of all, though, the summaries are brief and knowing ones– a cavalcade of problems that glimmer with hope and resentment. The lyrics are both realistically specific or hopelessly vague, but at no time are they unbelievable, shallow or without merit. The three-piece both experiments and falls into grooves. They are angry and honest while being sensible and clairvoyant. Small Factory watches, reacts and tells a pretty good story about consequences. As “things go by,” they took note of the most important lessons and instances and we, the few listeners, are better off for it.

I can’t describe what I’m like when I play this record, but I know I’m pretty content when it is on. Whether I find myself yelling alongside “Expiration Date,” nodding to “Everyone’s Happy for the First Time in Weeks,” or relating to the lost kid inside of “Sun Goes Ahh,” I’m content that I might be the only person in the world listening to this record. I’m comfortable with the notion that I’m one of the only ones who loves it like I do. Yet, I am dually uncomfortable that so many people don’t love it and that I was unable to tell them about it. I just can’t handle anyone telling me what it is not when it is, is, is so much.

Classic and Unappreciated: Small Factory’s For If You Cannot Fly (Part One, Side One)

The opening chord of For If You Cannot Fly is not just a power chord: it’s the battle cry of my 1990s.  Let me back up a moment. The measurement of a band should be their battle cry. Whether it’s political, personal, or metaphysical, the first chord,  the first song, the first ideas should be the thesis. What makes an album a spiritual experience? The fact that an experience is shared? Vague, yet introspective lyrics? I’ve always thought it was the opening chord, the first intriguing notes that bring the listener in. And maybe no better first lines, personally, exist than: The last time that I spoke to you, I said some pretty mean things. It didn’t feel good, but I felt better.

Amongst the albums in my collection that I’ve listened to hundreds of times, so many of them have become noise. I can do anything while they are on: write, read, sleep, etc. They are worn out grooves, markedly unsurprising songs, background pulse. Small Factory commands my attention no matter what is happening or who is around. For If You Cannot Fly has been with me through cardigans, military school, collegiate strangeness, growing into adulthood, funerals, sunny days, boredom, clutching sanity, breakups, relationships, NC, NYC, VA, NC again and now onward. On the right day, the days when I am not whoring for attention– the days where no one can really hear me and won’t ask me about the particulars– this is one of my top five albums.

I don’t want to share this album unless you are going to love it. I can’t listen to people badmouth something so personal. It would be you saying that riding with my sister to high school was boring, my drunken walks home through Astoria boring, my nights alone trying to write boring. It would be calling me boring. Albums frequently transcend the listener-creator relationship, but others are beholden to a different mindstate altogether. For If You Cannot Fly isn’t just an album I absolutely love: it’s an album I want to recreate. It’s an album I hold inwardly important, and it’s one I have trouble describing or talking about. Describing the conversational lyrics, the three-singer lineup, the two halves (as if it were written for vinyl/cassette, side A is completely different from side B), the way it starts as a sloppy punk album, descends into noisy indie and settles into alt-folk-alternative, it is all too strange for me. The album runs a gamut of emotional spheres and it works.

Ed. note: I’ve split the review into two “sides” as an homage.

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Classic and Unappreciated: Bluetip’s Join Us

Ed. note: This post first appeared in 2006 in a rougher form for an older project.

When Bluetip’s Join Us came out in 1998, I had no idea who they were. In fact, I had only limited knowledge of their contemporaries. All I knew was Dischord Records had provided some other fantastic taste-altering selections in my young life: Minor Threat, Fugazi, Rites of Spring, Jawbox, Government Issue, etc. I was mostly juggling upbeat pop-punk (Promise Ring, Get-up Kids, etc.) and downtrodden rock (Jawbreaker, Sunny Day Real Estate). The former was a by-product of three years removed from society—a jaunt in military school that was as much fueled by jock-rock than any discernable tastes, i.e. I took what I could get and that was accessible pop—and the latter a notation of my life in a pit stop on the way to the North Carolina beaches. Jawbreaker (et al) and the occasional hardcore band were the outlets of choice for lifelong friends.

Bluetip’s importance, personally, ranged from a straightforward lyrical mentality. There was no referential “you” or lovelorn scenarios unexplained. There were no frills—no metaphors that didn’t fit or unwarranted emotional outbursts. The streamlined approach explained more without a victim mentality. This lack of showiness is, however big a downfall with modern audiences, a cat-call to the angry male. This includes alternate takes on break-ups, the pursuit of happiness—including paring down one’s acquaintances while noting one’s loneliness—work-related problems and a general awareness of one’s actions and consequences. From the first chord to the last, every phrasing complete thought, fragmented curse, and impartial judgment of character remains important to the ideas behind Join Us. Continue reading ‘Classic and Unappreciated: Bluetip’s Join Us’

Classic and Unappreciated: Cambodian Rocks

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Is it possible to hear the sound of approaching doom?  Does approaching doom sound kind of like room tone, but darker?  Can we hear approaching doom squeezing a singer’s nerves tightly in its clutches?  Can we physically sense the presence of approaching doom as it plays maestro to an ill-fated orchestra?

For instance, some people seem convinced that they could hear Kurt Cobain’s demons lurking in the shadows of Unplugged In New York.  Yet how many of those claims come from keen human intuition, and how many are simply embellished memories revised by tragedy?  Hard to tell. Continue reading ‘Classic and Unappreciated: Cambodian Rocks’

Classic and Unappreciated: Captain Beefheart and His Magic Band’s Safe As Milk

Editor’s Note: In a series of “classic” articles, 10Listens is giving some love to albums that may not have gotten much in the past.  These won’t be reviews, per se, but collections of ideas spawned by revisiting albums we may be alone in loving. There’s no timetable to when these appear, so they will come as they may.  Enjoy. Oh, and if anyone comes up with a good name for this series, I’m all ears.

Somewhere in the second half of our 20th Century, a Delta Blues Man’s hitchhiking his way up the Mississippi toward Chicago, thinking he’s gonna be the second coming of Howlin’ Wolf.  Along the way he’s picked up by a van full of kids- whatta they call ‘em, beatniks?  Hippies?  Only they don’t dress like no beatniks or hippies.  They wear bold pinstripe suits and finely groomed facial hair, like dandy-boys.  Only they ain’t no dandy boys neither.  There may not be a single word to describe what these weirdos are.  Their license plate says California, so the Blues Man assumes they’re from San Francisco.  Then again they could very well be from Mars, or the future.

Whatever they are, they’re so stoked to meet an authentic Delta Blues singer- guess what, they’re musicians too, man!  They should totally jam!  Now the Blues Man reckons he sure ain’t no square, but he still wonders how much common ground he’ll find with these cats.  Even if they’re not hippies they still must be waist deep in all that hippy-dippy acid rock- The Magic Doors and The Strawberry Airplane and such.  He asks if they know any Bo Diddley, and they answer by busting out a gritty impromptu a cappella rendition of “Who Do You Love?”  So the Blues Man reckons these crazy cats just might be all right after all. “Well hell yes we can jam!” he says, and the not-quite-hippies rejoice.  But first, they say, how bout a little grass?  You dig grass, don’t you, Blues Man?  Sho ’nuff, baby.  Sho nuff, n’ yes I do…

When the smoke clears, the Delta Blues Man could swear they’re somewhere in the Mojave.  But how’d that happen if they were just on the outskirts of Memphis- what was it, 20 minutes ago?  5 hours ago?  And is that a giant gila monster sleeping on top of the sun?

They’re not even in the van anymore.  In fact, the van’s nowhere to be seen.  They’re all just standing there, surrounded by miles of sand and rock, with nothing but their gear in front of them.  Amps too, with power lights glowing red and traces of feedback humming in strange frequencies- but where in the hell are they plugged in?

The kid behind the drum kit says, “OK Blues Man, you kick it off and we’ll follow.”  So The Delta Blues Man steps up to a mic that looks like a bug-headed tree, and he clears his throat.  He starts playing this riff he’s been fooling with lately, this thing with a little slide to it, though he doesn’t really have any lyrics for it yet.  Then all of a sudden words just come to him from deep within his subconscious.  “I was born in a desert…came on up from New Orleeeeeans…” Wait, that don’t make no sense, ain’t no deserts in New Orleans…”I came upon a tornado, sunlight in the sky…” Tornadoes in sunlight?  A moon stickin’ in my eye?  What in the-

In spite of talkin’ all this nonsense jive, the band dives right in, fast and bulbous: a squid eating dough in a polyethylene bag.  The drummer lays down this herky-jerky locomotive groove, like a Johnny Cash tune with a peg-leg.  It’s odd, but the Blues Man can dig it.  The lead guitarist- Cooder, was that his name?- kid’s got otherworldly chops, he’s dancing on some other plane.  And that bass player!  So much energy, and yet so very smooth…

…he realizes they’ve been playing a brand new song for about a minute and a half now, in fact they’re already at the breakdown.  Just drums and that perfect bass line and the Blues Man hollering, “Zig-Zag traveler for the mercy mile!”, whatever that means.  It’s like the moment that all American music has been building up toward until now.  It’s blues, it’s Motown, it’s rock n’ motherfucking roll.  And not only that, it’s going to affect the course of music to come- that’s right, he can see the future now.  He doesn’t know John Lennon, and he doesn’t even know if he likes John Lennon, but he knows John Lennon is gonna go crazy for this noise.  Him and a couple guys named Joe Strummer and Tom Waits.  Also some blues rockin’ kid named Jackie White who hasn’t even been born yet.

The Blues Man’s mind tricks him into thinking he’s coming down, and so the band slides into a much safer song.  Safe as milk, you might say, so long as that milk hasn’t been basking in the desert heat.  The kind of song you’d sing to snag a woman: “Call on me whenever you’re lonely and blue.”  They could probably play Ed Sullivan with this tune, if they were the types who’d want to play on Ed Sullivan.  OK that was nice and all, but let’s get far out again, fellas.  I’m gonna sing this next one like some kind of bayou monster, and let’s see if we can make those guitars sound like mechanical caterpillars.  Yeah, that’s it.  And maybe let’s do a bridge where we slow it down to half-time and throw in some pianos or xylophones or something like that. All right now just for kicks let’s try another Top 40 ditty, something a little Smokey Robinson.  Hold on- you’ve got one of them theremins?  Well let’s see what kind of magic we can make with that bastard!  Ooh yeah, I can feel that vibe all the way down in my EEEEEeeeeeeEEEEE-Lec-Tri-Suh-Teeeeee….

In the distance, a mighty lighthouse rises up from the Earth and spews lightning like a gigantic Tesla coil.  The band skips jauntily down the Yellow Brick Road.  They summon the ancient spirits of Abba Zabba from dark, baboon-infested jungles. They grumble about factory jobs and pesky bosses while a wandering coyote drops by to blow on harmonica.  They bow and praise the miracle of Woman.  There’s a sad, Kafkaesque identity crisis in an unsettling time signature.  Finally the sun sets on our mythic jam session with a surreal memory of a distant Autumn- “feet of dust under trees of rust.”  Then the sun comes up again.  The Blues Man and his magic band decide that this whimsically menacing trip has gone on exactly as long as it needed to.  This is their gift to the gods, and if the gods desire to share this gift with humankind, these songs will find their way back somehow.